Her voice will be on the side of right : gender and power in women's antebellum antislavery fiction / Holly M. Kent.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781631012778 (e-book)
- 813/.3093552 23
- PS374.W6 .K55 2017
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Decades before the Civil War, the free American public was gripped by increasingly acrimonious debates about the nation's "peculiar institution" of slavery. Ministers considered the morality of slavery from their pulpits, legislators debated it in the halls of government, professors discussed it in their classrooms, and citizens argued about it in their communities. Antislavery women wrote novels and stories designed to convince free Americans about slavery's evils, to discuss the future of abolitionism, and to debate the proper roles of free and enslaved women in the antislavery struggle. Many antebellum writers and editors believed fiction was an especially gender appropriate medium for women to express their ideas publicly and a decidedly effective medium for reaching female readers. Believing that women were naturally more empathetic and imaginative than men, writers and editors hoped that powerfully told stories about enslaved people's sufferings would be invaluable in converting free female readers to abolitionism.
Female antislavery authors consistently expressed a belief in women's innate moral superiority to men. While male characters in women's fiction doubted the validity of abolitionism (at best) and actively upheld the slave system (at worst), female characters invariably recognized slavery's immorality and did all in their power to undermine the institution. Certain of women's moral clarity on the "slave question," female antislavery authors nonetheless struggled to define e how women could best put their antislavery ideals into action. When their efforts to morally influence men failed, how could women translate their abolitionist values into activism that was effective but did not violate nineteenth-century ideals of "respectable" femininity?
Holly M. Kent analyzes the literary works produced by antislavery women writers during the antebellum era, considers the complex ways that female authors crafted their arguments against slavery and reflected on the best ways for women to participate in antislavery activism. Since existing scholarship of antislavery women's literature has largely concentrated on Harriet Beecher Stowe's 1852 bestseller Uncle Tom's Cabin, the voices of other, more obscure antislavery women writers have all too often been lost.
Her Voice Will Be on the Side of Right brings the ideas, perspectives, and writings of a wide range of female antislavery authors back into our understandings of debates about gender, race, and slavery during this crucial era in U.S. history.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2016. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
CHOICE Review
This monograph focuses on how white women writers' antislavery fiction in the antebellum South challenged social and gender order. Often the premise was that women, including enslaved females, were morally superior to men: women were sexually pure, devoted to family, and morally astute. Kent (history, Univ. of Illinois, Springfield) approaches the complex historiography of this feminism by the decade. Starting with the 1820s and stopping at the dawn of the Civil War, she traces the subversive possibilities of women's fiction, analyzing antislavery fiction in newspapers, periodicals, and gift books. Although Kent's scholarship is dense, the questions she raises are fascinating: Why did moral suasion fail? How are gender and sexuality interreliant? How did women's subject matter and field of action change as time passed? Those seeking an overview of this subject will find it in Jean Fagan Yellin's Women and Sisters: The Antislavery Feminists in American Culture (CH, Nov'90, 28-1762) and The Abolitionist Sisterhood: Women's Political Culture in Antebellum America, ed. by Yellin and John C. Van Horne (CH, Jan'95, 32-2926). Kent's thoroughly researched book--with its copious chapter notes and useful primary and secondary bibliography--is appropriate for serious scholars in the field. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty. --Sandra Ann Parker, emerita, Hiram CollegeThere are no comments on this title.